Helen Norton holds the Rothgerber Chair in Constitutional Law at the University of Colorado, School of Law, where she focuses on constitutional and civil rights law. Before entering academia, Professor Norton served as Deputy Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights at the US Department of Justice.
'In The Government's Speech and the Constitution, Helen Norton offers the most comprehensive, thoughtful, and insightful analysis of the constitutionality of government speech ever written. This expansive conception of government speech has been largely unexplored in our scholarly literature, and Norton unpacks these complex issues in an exceptionally original and illuminating manner.' Geoffrey R. Stone, University of Chicago 'A thoughtful, nuanced, and accessible book on a complex and important topic. Norton takes her readers on a rich and rewarding tour of the forms that government speech can take, of the often murky and contested line between government speech and private speech, and of the wide range of constitutional doctrines that shape the legal parameters of government speech.' Heidi Kitrosser, University of Minnesota 'The multiple faces of speech by modern government, and its relationship to the United States Constitution is analyzed by Helen Norton in wonderfully nuanced, panoptic, accessible, and thought-provoking detail. Government control over its speech can become power over ours. What it does with that power thus matters to our constitutional integrity, and Norton very convincingly shows us why. Indeed, no contemporary free speech scholar does so more powerfully, or in a more fair-minded manner.' Toni M. Massaro, University of Arizona 'A magnificent account of the constitutional questions raised by ordinary government speech.' Mark Graber, Balkinization 'A fine book that demonstrates the multiple ways that government officials can violate the Bill of Rights and the Fourteenth Amendment through their speech.' Jack Balkin, Balkinization 'A marvelous book. Norton expertly guides the reader through what she calls 'first-stage' government speech problems, which involve the question of whether it is the government or some private actor who is speaking, and 'second-stage' problems, which involve the question of whether some instance of government speech is constitutionally permissible.' Josh Chafetz, Balkinization '[T]his book [i]s the required resource on this increasingly important domain of First Amendment theory and doctrine.' Fred Schauer, Balkinization 'This is an enormous contribution to our understanding of an often mysterious topic, and the discussion she has sparked will undoubtedly continue.' Sonja West, Balkinization